H. Wildon Carr
Herbert Wildon Carr (16 January 1857 – 8 July 1931) was a British philosopher. He was known for reconciling Leibnizian Monadology with Bergsonian vitalism.[1] LifeCarr was Professor of Philosophy, King's College London from 1918 to 1925, and visiting professor at the University of Southern California from 1925 until his death.[1] He was Honorary Secretary of the Aristotelian Society for many years and President during 1916-1918.[1] He was the editor of Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society until 1929.[1] Carr translated Henri Bergson's book Mind Energy, published in 1920. He died on 8 July 1931 in Los Angeles, aged 74.[2] PhilosophyCarr was an advocate of Bergsonian vitalism which he combined with a monadistic idealism.[1][3][4] In a symposium of the Aristotelian Society he authored The Idealistic Interpretation of Einstein's Theory (1921–1922) which declared that the theory of relativity was in "complete accord" with idealistic philosophy, not realism.[1] Carr stated that "while my theory of knowledge is idealistic and even solipsistic, my theory of existence is vitalistic". He defined creative evolution as "an idealistic principle applied to positive science".[1] He argued that materialistic and mechanistic principles fail to explain the intelligence of organisms. He has been described as a pantheist.[1] Selected publications
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